Business

US Fed to provide fresh clues on rate cuts after uptick in inflation

[ad_1]

FROM THREE TO TWO?

In December’s SEP, policymakers pencilled in three interest rate cuts for 2024, as the Fed moves to ease monetary policy while continuing to push inflation down towards its long-run target.

The March update published on Wednesday is unlikely to show a significant shift, although some analysts see a chance that the policymakers could reduce the number of cuts they expect to see this year.

Wells Fargo still expects the Fed to pencil in three interest rate cuts for 2024, Pugliese said. This is one less than the bank’s own prediction of four rate cuts this year.

However, policymakers are more likely to lower their expectations for rate cuts on Wednesday than they are to raise them, he added.

“Looking at the projections, we do think there is a risk that we see two rate cuts instead of three,” EY senior economist Lydia Boussour told AFP.

“We’ve got a lot of noise in the inflation data and some upside surprises,” she said. “So there may be some Fed officials that are inclined to adopt a bit more of a hawkish posture.”

PATH OF CUTS UNCERTAIN

In recent weeks, officials at the US central bank – led by Fed chair Jerome Powell – have urged caution about cutting interest rates too quickly, and have instead said they will follow a “data-dependent” path.

“The economic outlook is uncertain, and ongoing progress toward our 2 per cent inflation objective is not assured,” Powell told lawmakers in Washington earlier this month.

He later confirmed that he still expects cuts to begin this year.

Futures traders currently assign a probability of around 55 per cent that the Fed will start cutting interest rates by Jun 12, according to data from CME Group.

This marks a significant shift from the run-up to the Fed’s last rate decision in January, when traders were still widely anticipating the first would come in May.

“We were thinking May; we’ve moved that back to June,” Kathy Bostjancic from Nationwide told AFP. “And if it’s not June, I think July.”

“I think they’re really going to be inclined to remain in this wait-and-see mode, and wait for more data to really make that move,” said EY’s Boussour, who also expects the Fed’s first rate cut to come in June.

[ad_2]

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button